Shared Flashcard Set

Details

Authors
authors
33
Political Studies
Undergraduate 1
02/28/2012

Additional Political Studies Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Eichengreen: Globalizing Capital
Definition
Explain GS: Realism
open markets and british hegemony allowed GS to be popular, pathway dependency and network externalities influences this choice.
Term
Strange: Politics of international currencies
Definition
Explain GS: realism
benefits to having a key currency include seignorage, prestige, balance of payments adjustment, leverage, control...etc.
Term
Cohen: currency and state power
Definition
explaining GS: realism
benefits of having a key currency, usually the hegemon. balance of payments, seignorage, prestige, leverage...etc.
Term
Bordo: Gold Standard, the traditional approach
Definition
explaining GS: lib./constructivism
people accepted this standard and used it widely because gold was relatively the same price everywhere, so it made transactions cheaper and increased trade.
Term
Frieden: Rise, reign and demise of the classical gold standard
Definition
explaining GS: realism/Analib
R: london was a financial sector doing well, people wanted a piece of the pie
AL: forced upon the government by bank and powerful financial sector.
Term
Eichengreen: sterling 1931
Definition
fall of GS: realism
fall of GS due to floating of sterling caused by external shocks to a weak government.
Term
Krasner and Brawley: Afterglow
Definition
fall of GS: realism
lack of hegemony of britain led to them attempting to maintain because of afterglow and US refusal to dominate. UK wanted benefits of key currency - didn't have the power.
Term
Simmons: Who adjusts?
Definition
fall of GS: analytical liberalism
lack of hegemony means no decisions made can be attributed to power. Realism cannot explain variation in policy to bad systemic conditions. because of SUFFRAGE new interests were represented, one against GS
Term
Brawley: PMT
Definition
fall of GS: analytical liberalism
engaged in predatory devaluations to appeas domestic groups (smoot-hawley)
Term
Obtsfeld: Trilemma and the interwar period
Definition
fall of GS: analib
emergence of trilemma, states chose autonomy because of suffrage
Term
Krasner and Lake: stability
Definition
Bretton woods: realism
hegemon = stability
Term
Odell
Definition
bretton woods:
realism: systemic (econ - balance of payment, poli - war) systemic conditions for crisis
analib - no - no one really lobbied
bureau - yes
indiv - conally, kissinger and nixon & Volcker group
Term
Gowa: Explaing closing the gold window
Definition
bretton woods: constructivism
individuals played the largest role
Term
Kahler: Explaining 1980s crisis
Definition
key players: banks, national governments, IMF, Debtors
cooperation: VERY HIGH, no hegemonic stability
coalitions: north and south
Euromarkets: unregulated
Term
Lipson: Third world debt
Definition
Euromerkets, petrodollars
Credit syndication: linked banks
focus on rescheduling
Term
Lipon: Banker dilemma
Definition
involuntary lending to get their money back focus on rescheduling
Term
Bird and Rowlands: catalytic effect
Definition
At best modest, why invest in country approaching IMF?
MORAL HAZARD
Term
Polak: IMF memoire
Definition
conditionality form developed to developing with changing clientele.
asymmetrical actors =/= symmetrical contracts
silent revolution: Washington consensus
too much fiscal, not enough exchange rate focus in IMF
convergence of interests IMF and domestic officials
Term
Broz and Hawes: congressional politics
Definition
money-centre banks/skilled labour like it - PUBLIC GOOD stability
Term
Broz and Blomberg: PE of IMF voting
Definition
Quota system: more you pay, more votes - formula questioned
Rich countries need more control or they won't contribute. Current quota system actually serves to reduce inequality.
Term
Copelovitch: Private debt composition
Definition
IMF staff, FI and larger countries determine who gets sweet deals

Will lend in accordance to bank exposure because banks failing is bad: domestic instability, financial intermediary and provider of domestic credit.
Term
Krugman: currency crises
Definition
self fulfilling (optimism/pessimism), herding (bandwagoning), contagion, market manipulation (mexico).
Term
Reinhart : notes on contagion
Definition
Knowing there is a crisis elsewhere significantly increases the likelihood of a domestic crisis it is caused by financial sector linkages
intra-regional trade important but canot explain mexico/argentina.
Term
DeLong: meltdown and moral hazard
Definition
Mexico: tesebonos, Clinton wanted Mexico stable, NAFTA and immigration. DOMESTIC INTERESTS, why they didn't take swift action in asia.

lesson: large scale foreign borrowing renders exchange rate futile in stabilization.
Term
Sachs: LLR
Definition
Needs an LLR - bankruptcy court, NOT IMF
Value of assets depend on market expectations, which determine the value of assets.

It should be a coordinator of funds from the private capital markets rather than lending its own money.
Term
Obstfeld: Financial Stability, Trilemma and International Reserves
Definition
reserve accumulation maages instability and exchange rates. Without it banks: no regulation, gamble it, bride people to overlook bad spending. Reserves is how Taiwan avoided 1990s.
Term
Dornbusch: After asia - vulnerability
Definition
without vulnerability, crises are unlikely.
1) borrow short term, invest long term, borrow in foreign currency, buying fluctuating assets, national credit risk, lumping (contagion).

risk management is NECESSARY
Term
Eichengreen and Friden: PE of EMU
Definition
both political and economic.
Economic: transaction costs, interest rate convergence, financial market.
political: negotiation, symbolism, ratification.
1973 snake, 1979 E- 1987 MS/ERM, 1986 single european act, 1988: delors commission, 1992 unification trouble, 1994 sorted.

optimum gain area: costs high, not economically justified only good for a common market.

intergovernmentalism: coercion, linking issues
Term
Friden: winners and losers
Definition
Mundell: not economically worth it, but critique: only looks at social welfare, not long term benefits.

3 political factors: anti-inflation cred, integration (no second class) business pushed for it

low inflation versus employment. strong or weak? city versus country?

not geopolitical
Term
Fischer
Definition
bipolarity hypothesis: must have hard peg monetary union, or floats. no in between.
Term
Obstfeld: america is the worlds problem
Definition
soft landing and the new benign neglect: global capital markets are forgiving so USD can adjust slowly.
Critique: relies on unintegrated goods market, not highly integrated asset market. If US changes spending, will have significant effect on currency, up to 20% depreciation.
Term
Henning: Exchange rate weapon
Definition
exchange rate weapon: instrument of leverage in statecraft and explains state behaviour. can DELAY or DEFLECT transitional cost of adjustment. can be PASSIVE or ACTIVE. Asymmetry is assumed.

1977 - 1978 Locomotive theory: US wanted world economy stimulated, so threatened to devalue their currency so Japan and Germany provided the stimulus, engaged in inflation and eliminated their surpluses.

EU limits the use, possibly motivated by it?
Term
Krugman: crises
Definition
third generation crises: currency depreciation set off by speculative attacks. this depresses investment and there is a de-leveraging cycle. capital mobility is a pre-req

Conclusion: 2006 crisis will be very long and difficult because it is an asset crisis, not a currency crisis.
Supporting users have an ad free experience!